Herrman v. Daffin

302 S.W.2d 313, 1957 Mo. App. LEXIS 631
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 9, 1957
Docket7543
StatusPublished
Cited by41 cases

This text of 302 S.W.2d 313 (Herrman v. Daffin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Herrman v. Daffin, 302 S.W.2d 313, 1957 Mo. App. LEXIS 631 (Mo. Ct. App. 1957).

Opinion

RUARK, Judge.

This case arises out of the fact that an owner (Daifin) paid his contractors (Altman and Gibson Construction Company) the balance on construction price of a residence. The contractors in turn paid a portion of the money to their materialmen (Herrman Lumber Company, a partnership), who applied such payment to other,' and older, indebtedness due them from the contractors, thus leaving exposed and unpaid their debt for the materials which went into the Daifin house. Later the material-men filed suit to foreclose a mechanic’s lien on this house.

At a pretrial conference a special jury issue was made up as to whether the payment made by the contractors should have been applied to the debt owed for materials which went into Daffins’ house. The jury found the issues in favor of Daffins, and plaintiffs-materialmen have appealed. The first question raised by appellants is “that defendants did not produce sufficient evidence to justify the court in submitting that question to the jury,” and that plaintiffs’ motions aimed at such question should have been sustained.

The general rule in regard to application of payments is that the debtor has the right to specify the account to which the payment will be applied. If the debtor fails to so specify, the creditor may make the application; and if neither debtor nor creditor exercises his prerogative, then the law will make the application as right and justice requires, usually to the credit of the oldest unsecured account. 1 This general rule is applicable to payments made by a contractor to a materialman, but it is subject to the qualification that if the material-man creditor knows or is chargeable with knowledge of the source of such payment, then (the majority rule is) it becomes the *316 duty of the materialman to make the application in such manner and to such items as will give credit to and protect the rights of the person so supplying the funds. 2 , 3

We do not find where the Missouri courts have spoken on this question. In Campbell Glass & Paint Co. v. Davis-Page Planing Mill Co., 130 Mo.App. 474, 110 S.W. 24, 25, the statement was made that the creditor was not “bound to ascertain from what particular contract the contractor realized the money with which he made payments.” That case, however, did not involve knowledge or notice and therefore is not decisive. But the mechanics’ lien statutes have an equitable purpose, their aim being to accomplish substantial justice between the parties, 4 and if we are to borrow coals from our neighbor states we choose the majority rule, which applies equitable principles. 5

The inquiry, then, is whether the jury could have reasonably found or inferred from the facts and circumstances that plaintiffs’ manager had knowledge of the source of the funds with which the contractors paid him. Whether there was-evidence to carry to the jury the question, of plaintiffs’ knowledge requires a review of (only) the evidence most favorable to' establish the affirmative of such question (knowledge), since the verdict was in favor of the defendants-proponents of that question. 6

Knowledge may be proved by circumstantial evidence as well as by direct evidence. 7 But the circumstances must be such that the necessary fact may be inferred therefrom and must reasonably follow, so that the conclusion so reached is-not the result of guesswork, conjecture or speculation, 8 and such evidence must “have a tendency” to exclude every other reasonable conclusion. 9

Another facet of the inquiry is whether or not the jury might reasonably have found that plaintiffs were in possession of' such information as would charge them with knowledge of the source of the funds. *317 One way of saying it is that the knowledge of the ultimate fact (in this instance that the source of the money was Daffin) will be imputed to the plaintiffs if they were in possession of such information (sum total knowledge of minor facts) as would have impelled an honest, reasonable and prudent man to inquire about the main fact, if the means of making such inquiry were reasonably available to them and if, had such inquiry been made, it would have produced and made apparent the ultimate fact. 10 In James v. Hutchinson, Mo.App., 211 S.W.2d 507, 510, it is said:

“[N]otice does not usually require proof of positive information brought directly home to the party sought to be charged therewith, but instead, if the means of knowledge are placed in his hands under such circumstances as to have put an ordinarily prudent per-' son on inquiry, he is then to be charged with knowledge of whatever facts a proper inquiry would have disclosed. Meier v. Blume, 80 Mo. 179. ‘Whether one actually knows a given fact is often a secret to which he alone has the key, but justice is not so indulgent as to encourage his throwing the key away.’ Barrett v. Davis, 104 Mo. 549, 561, 16 S.W. 377, 380.”

The record is voluminous and we do not attempt to set forth any of it except that which we believe is favorable to defendants-owners Daffin, who received the verdict. The partnership of Altman and Gibson Construction Company, which was the contractor in this instance, entered into the house building business about January 1, 1953. It was dissolved about Labor Day, 1954. From the beginning this company had money troubles, with plaintiffs, whom we call “materialmen,” as well as other creditors. From time to time all its creditors were “trying to find out when they were going to get some money,” and, according to one of the contractors, the fellow who kept after them the most was “the fellow that got the money.” Plaintiffs-materialmen had supplied the contracting firm from the outset and such contracting firm bought practically all of its lumber requirements from plaintiffs. Plaintiffs-materialmen’s bookkeeping process was that daily purchases and credits made by the contractors were entered on individual tickets and posted upon ledger sheets the following day. The materialmen kept individual ledger sheets for each separate “job” of these contractors, and such ledger sheets were kept posted to date. Thus the credit status of each of the contractors’ separate projects was discernible at a glance. Owner Daffin’s contract called for a fixed price, but from time to time changes were made which added to that price. The material-men carried one ledger sheet which showed the principal charges and a separate ledger sheet showed these “extras.” According to the ledger sheets, the contractors’ purchases of materials for the owners-Daffins’ residence commenced on April 13, 1954, and continued with purchases almost every day until the last purchase dated July 12, 1954. The purchases made during the last twenty days were comparatively small. The balance carried forward on this date showed an indebtedness, on the “regular” sheet, of $4,652.03, and $390.14 on the “extra” sheet.

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Bluebook (online)
302 S.W.2d 313, 1957 Mo. App. LEXIS 631, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/herrman-v-daffin-moctapp-1957.